livingston portmaster
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RAS::PortMaster 1.16
RAS::PortMaster.pm is a Perl Interface to Livingston PortMaster 2. more>>
RAS::PortMaster.pm is a Perl Interface to Livingston PortMaster 2.
SYNOPSIS
RAS::PortMaster is a PERL 5 module for interfacing with a Livingston PortMaster remote access server. Using this module, one can very easily construct programs to find a particular user in a bank of PMs, disconnect users, get usage statistics, or execute arbitrary commands on a PM.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
RAS::PortMaster is a PERL 5 module for interfacing with a Livingston PortMaster remote access server. Using this module, one can very easily construct programs to find a particular user in a bank of PMs, disconnect users, get usage statistics, or execute arbitrary commands on a PM.
Download (0.006MB)
Added: 2007-04-18 License: Public Domain Price:
920 downloads
Simple Sockets Library 7c
Simple Sockets Library provides a simple C programming interface to sockets. more>>
Simple Sockets Library provides a simple C programming interface to sockets.
The Simple Sockets Library makes sockets easy to use and comes as public domain source code. It resembles Cs file I/O, uses whatever port is available, has named servers and port reuse, streaming/blocking sockets used, polling support, blocking/selection support via numerous functions, timeout control and firewall support.
Main features:
- Resembles Cs file i/o:
- Sclose() Sgets() Sopen() Sprintf() Sputs() Sread() Sscanf() Swrite() Svprintf()
- Uses currently available ports only, so if a server can be brought up, it will be
- Named sockets -- servers have names, not fixed port addresses!
- (no more REUSEADDR problems, linger setting, zombie sockets!)
- Streaming/blocking sockets used
- Polling supported (ie. avoids blocking):
- Stest() Smasktest() Speek()
- Numerous functions to handle multiple concurrent clients:
- Smaskfdset() Smaskpush() Smasktime() Smaskunset() Smaskwait()
- Smaskget() Smaskset() Smaskunfdset() Smaskuse() Sprtmask()
- Smaskpop() Smasktest()
- Timeout control:
- Stimeoutwait() Smasktime()
- The PortMaster (Spm): Maintains a distributed port/server-name database Each machine runs a PortMaster which maps servers by name to their ports (transparent to programmers and users!)
- Firewall Support
- The PortMaster can (optionally) only "put through" connections from approved machine sites
- Supports "path"ing for sockets: one can use an environment variable to track down a server, by name, on any machine in a group:
- Sopenv()
- Doesnt need root privileges (thats Unix lingo...)
- Now supports fixed ports (servers and/or clients) to facilitate interfacing to non-SSL servers/clients
The Simple Sockets Librarys main purpose is to provide an Application Programming Interface that strongly resembles the standard C librarys file handling interface. Thus programmers find that the Simple Sockets Librarys learning curve is particularly short. As a secondary purpose the Simple Sockets Library helps programmers avoid some common programming problems with sockets (avoided: large buffers that dont transfer in their entirety without special effort, the Nagle algorithms practical effect of often limiting one to five transfers per second, servers whose ports refuse to re-open until two minutes have passed, etc). Strings are null-byte terminated just like regular C/C++ strings, facilitating their ease of use in C/C++ programming.
The Simple Sockets Library preferentially uses names for its servers rather than requiring hard-coded port numbers. Imagine if, instead of files having names, everyone went about saying "use sector 4 and track 14" or somesuch thing. This situation reflects what we now have with sockets -- and when two programs use the same port number for their servers, they cant co-exist simultaneously on a system. However, especially for those whose programs must interface with other programs using hard-coded port numbers, the Simple Socket Library also supports hard-code port numbers.
The Simple Sockets Library opens streaming sockets. Thus the Simple Sockets Librarys sockets provide guaranteed delivery of information in the correct order (unlike datagrams, for example).
The PortMaster (Spm), source code for which is part of the library, provides a "phonebook" to map server names to dynamically allocated port numbers. Port numbers thus wont clash; the operating system determines which ones are currently available and the PortMasters effectively publish the result.
Enhancements:
- (Marcel Satchel) improved for Windows
- (Aug 22, 2005) included the "b" option for Sopen() (block until requested server becomes available)
- (Marcel Satchel) Sinit.c fixed (yet again!)
<<lessThe Simple Sockets Library makes sockets easy to use and comes as public domain source code. It resembles Cs file I/O, uses whatever port is available, has named servers and port reuse, streaming/blocking sockets used, polling support, blocking/selection support via numerous functions, timeout control and firewall support.
Main features:
- Resembles Cs file i/o:
- Sclose() Sgets() Sopen() Sprintf() Sputs() Sread() Sscanf() Swrite() Svprintf()
- Uses currently available ports only, so if a server can be brought up, it will be
- Named sockets -- servers have names, not fixed port addresses!
- (no more REUSEADDR problems, linger setting, zombie sockets!)
- Streaming/blocking sockets used
- Polling supported (ie. avoids blocking):
- Stest() Smasktest() Speek()
- Numerous functions to handle multiple concurrent clients:
- Smaskfdset() Smaskpush() Smasktime() Smaskunset() Smaskwait()
- Smaskget() Smaskset() Smaskunfdset() Smaskuse() Sprtmask()
- Smaskpop() Smasktest()
- Timeout control:
- Stimeoutwait() Smasktime()
- The PortMaster (Spm): Maintains a distributed port/server-name database Each machine runs a PortMaster which maps servers by name to their ports (transparent to programmers and users!)
- Firewall Support
- The PortMaster can (optionally) only "put through" connections from approved machine sites
- Supports "path"ing for sockets: one can use an environment variable to track down a server, by name, on any machine in a group:
- Sopenv()
- Doesnt need root privileges (thats Unix lingo...)
- Now supports fixed ports (servers and/or clients) to facilitate interfacing to non-SSL servers/clients
The Simple Sockets Librarys main purpose is to provide an Application Programming Interface that strongly resembles the standard C librarys file handling interface. Thus programmers find that the Simple Sockets Librarys learning curve is particularly short. As a secondary purpose the Simple Sockets Library helps programmers avoid some common programming problems with sockets (avoided: large buffers that dont transfer in their entirety without special effort, the Nagle algorithms practical effect of often limiting one to five transfers per second, servers whose ports refuse to re-open until two minutes have passed, etc). Strings are null-byte terminated just like regular C/C++ strings, facilitating their ease of use in C/C++ programming.
The Simple Sockets Library preferentially uses names for its servers rather than requiring hard-coded port numbers. Imagine if, instead of files having names, everyone went about saying "use sector 4 and track 14" or somesuch thing. This situation reflects what we now have with sockets -- and when two programs use the same port number for their servers, they cant co-exist simultaneously on a system. However, especially for those whose programs must interface with other programs using hard-coded port numbers, the Simple Socket Library also supports hard-code port numbers.
The Simple Sockets Library opens streaming sockets. Thus the Simple Sockets Librarys sockets provide guaranteed delivery of information in the correct order (unlike datagrams, for example).
The PortMaster (Spm), source code for which is part of the library, provides a "phonebook" to map server names to dynamically allocated port numbers. Port numbers thus wont clash; the operating system determines which ones are currently available and the PortMasters effectively publish the result.
Enhancements:
- (Marcel Satchel) improved for Windows
- (Aug 22, 2005) included the "b" option for Sopen() (block until requested server becomes available)
- (Marcel Satchel) Sinit.c fixed (yet again!)
Download (0.18MB)
Added: 2007-03-13 License: Public Domain Price:
962 downloads
FreeRADIUS 1.1.6
FreeRADIUS is a feature-rich, high-performance RADIUS server. more>>
FreeRADIUS is the premiere open source RADIUS server. While detailed statistics are not available, we believe that FreeRADIUS is well within the top 5 RADIUS servers world-wide, in terms of the number of people who use it daily for authentication.
FreeRADIUS project scales from embedded systems with small amounts of memory, to systems with millions of users. It is fast, flexible, configurable, and supports more authentication protocols than many commercial servers.
The FreeRADIUS Server Project encompasses more than just a RADIUS server. The related software includes a PAM authentication module, and an Apache 1.3 and 2.0 authentication module. The server comes with a PHP-based web user administration tool, called dialupadmin.
The RADIUS server has more features and is more flexible than any other free software RADIUS server, and many commercial servers. Most commercial servers are distributed as a "base" system ($), and an "enhanced" version ($$) with more features. FreeRADIUS has all the features of a commercial "enhanced" server, without the associated cost.
In it simplest form, the server is similar to Livingstons 2.0 server. Many configuration files are similar, and the general operation of the server should be familiar to anyone who has used a variant of the Livingston server.
FreeRADIUS can be extended significantly from this simple form, however. There are many modules and configuration files which have no equivalent in older RADIUS servers. These new features permit FreeRADIUS to work within complex systems, and environments which require high performance.
To support the demanding requirements of a modern RADIUS server, FreeRADIUS features more than 50 vendor-specific dictionary files. It ships with support for LDAP, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle databases. It supports EAP, with EAP-MD5, EAP-SIM, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-PEAP, and Cisco LEAP sub-types.
It supports proxying, with fail-over and load balancing. It has reached a stable 1.0 release, with incremental improvements being added and tested daily. In short, it is a powerful, fast, and complex RADIUS server which is compatible with the latest network protocols and practices, and is well suited for deployment in any size network.
Enhancements:
- A few dictionaries have been added.
- Several bugs have been fixed, including some double frees that were found in 1.1.5.
- Nearly 30 bugs found by Coverity were also fixed, including a memory leak in the EAP-TTLS code.
<<lessFreeRADIUS project scales from embedded systems with small amounts of memory, to systems with millions of users. It is fast, flexible, configurable, and supports more authentication protocols than many commercial servers.
The FreeRADIUS Server Project encompasses more than just a RADIUS server. The related software includes a PAM authentication module, and an Apache 1.3 and 2.0 authentication module. The server comes with a PHP-based web user administration tool, called dialupadmin.
The RADIUS server has more features and is more flexible than any other free software RADIUS server, and many commercial servers. Most commercial servers are distributed as a "base" system ($), and an "enhanced" version ($$) with more features. FreeRADIUS has all the features of a commercial "enhanced" server, without the associated cost.
In it simplest form, the server is similar to Livingstons 2.0 server. Many configuration files are similar, and the general operation of the server should be familiar to anyone who has used a variant of the Livingston server.
FreeRADIUS can be extended significantly from this simple form, however. There are many modules and configuration files which have no equivalent in older RADIUS servers. These new features permit FreeRADIUS to work within complex systems, and environments which require high performance.
To support the demanding requirements of a modern RADIUS server, FreeRADIUS features more than 50 vendor-specific dictionary files. It ships with support for LDAP, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle databases. It supports EAP, with EAP-MD5, EAP-SIM, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-PEAP, and Cisco LEAP sub-types.
It supports proxying, with fail-over and load balancing. It has reached a stable 1.0 release, with incremental improvements being added and tested daily. In short, it is a powerful, fast, and complex RADIUS server which is compatible with the latest network protocols and practices, and is well suited for deployment in any size network.
Enhancements:
- A few dictionaries have been added.
- Several bugs have been fixed, including some double frees that were found in 1.1.5.
- Nearly 30 bugs found by Coverity were also fixed, including a memory leak in the EAP-TTLS code.
Download (2.2MB)
Added: 2007-04-13 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
943 downloads
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